Data-only cityEquity data available. Programs, species, and local info need community input.
Share local info →What is the Tree Equity Score?
American Forests' Tree Equity Score combines tree canopy coverage, surface temperature, income, employment, race, age, and health data to identify where trees are needed most. Scores range from 0 to 100, and areas below 60 are priority for investment.
View Long Beach on Tree Equity Score ↗76.3
TES Score / 100
11.2%
Current Canopy
28.2%
Canopy Goal
17.0%
Canopy Gap
Current: 11.2%Goal: 28.2%
Current canopy
Gap to goal
Environmental Benefits
Carbon Sequestered
14.5K tons CO₂/yr
+25.3K tons if gap closed
Stormwater Intercepted
103.1M gal/yr
Avg Tree Shade at Noon
20.4%
Canopy Area
14.1 km²
of 133.2 km² total
Estimated using i-Tree urban canopy rates. Methodology ↗
Equity Indicators
These factors show how tree canopy gaps overlap with social and environmental vulnerabilities.
1930s Redlining
55.6%
of neighborhoods were graded "hazardous" or "declining" on 1930s federal lending maps. Banks refused to invest in these areas, and many are still under-treed decades later.
Environmental Justice
52.0%
of neighborhoods are classified as overburdened by the White House's Climate & Economic Justice Screening Tool, meaning they face outsized pollution, poverty, or health risks. Trees help, but they're not the whole fix.
Heat Island Effect
-4.7°F
cooler than surrounding areas on average. The canopy is doing its job here.
People in the Data
468,157
people live across the 329 Census block groups we analyzed. That's who these numbers represent.
Data last updated: Feb 2026
Help build the Long Beach page
We have Tree Equity data but this city is missing free tree programs, local nurseries, native species info, and community partners. Your local knowledge turns a data page into something people can actually use.
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Data only
Long Beach, CA: 100% data coverage, 0% program coverage. We're lopsided and we know it.
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